Right-Sizing Support Functions Part II: Knowledge@Wharton: Can You Give An Example of A
Right-Sizing Support Functions Part II: Knowledge@Wharton: Can You Give An Example of A
Right-Sizing Support Functions Part II: Knowledge@Wharton: Can You Give An Example of A
This portion of our two-part interview on eradicating inefficiencies from support functions also features Reinhard Messenboeck,
a partner and managing director with the Boston Consulting Group, explaining the steps companies can take to eliminate
over-layering or duplication. The most important lever is to get the service level discussion going between those who provide
a service and those who actually take it up, and thereby reduce service levels to the right level. When you look at a total
possible savings range being 100%, youll probably get about 30% to 40% of those savings out of that specific lever.
units the ones who produce and the ones who take it
and also on the budgeting level on a quarterly basis
so, you make best use of your enterprise resources,
especially at the support function level.
Knowledge@Wharton: When you go into a company,
as as a consultant, how do you actually observe that
theres inefficiency? What do you look for? How do
you see it? You mention that sometimes the waste is
invisible, its not laying around on the shop floor.
Messenboeck: We look at it through four lenses:
Number one, we measure how many resources are
attached to certain activities. So, how many HR people
do recruiting?
Number two, we look at organizational structure how
deep is it? How spread out [vertically] is it? Typically,
you find that if they are too spread out or too deep they
are inefficient.
Number three, what do they deliver? What sort of key
process indicators or key performance indicators do we
find? How long does something take? How long does
it take you to get your monthly closing? How long does
it take you to do your budget? How long does it take
you to actually get someone hired if you have an open
position?
Lastly, number four, we look at the internal quality
of service. Whats the feedback that HR gives finance?
Whats the feedback that procurement gives the
quality of service the timing, the level of service and
so on?
So, if you look through those four lenses and evaluate, it
gives you a really good picture where the real problems
lie and how to overcome them.
Knowledge@Wharton: Would you give an example of a
company that actually did that?
Messenboeck: We worked with a chemical company in
Europe, we found just taking their finance and their
HR function, that they had very different issues. The
finance function was actually very lean, very narrow
structured in their organization, but they didnt get
involved in any kind of business-related needs. They
didnt provide the numbers that people needed to do
sales forecasting, to do proper client-based budgeting,
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